What is paraphrasing?

Paraphrase is one of three ways of using another writer's work in your own writing, the other two being quotation and
summary.
The aim of paraphrasing is to change the words in the original text, while keeping the same meaning. This is different from quotation, which
has the same words (as well as the same meaning). As the words have been changed, a paraphrase should not use quotation marks ("...").
Summary differs from paraphrase in that a summary is shorter than the original, whereas a paraphrase is the same length.
When you paraphrase another writer's ideas, you will need to use
in-text citations to acknowledge the source
(this is the same for all three ways of using another writer's work). The following table summarises these points.

Quotation

Paraphrase

Summary

Same words as original

Same length as original

Uses " "

Uses in-text citations

Why paraphrase?

Effective paraphrasing is essential in order to avoid
plagiarism.
A mistake many beginning academic writers make is to change a few but
not enough of the words, leaving copied chunks from the original - so it is part paraphrase, part quotation, but without quotations marks
(and therefore stealing a writer's words).
Avoiding plagiarism, however, is not the main aim of paraphrasing.
As mentioned above, there are three ways to use another writer's work in your own: quotation, paraphrase and summary.
Paraphrase is the most common of the three. It is usually favoured over quotation for two reasons: first,
it allows you to demonstrate understanding of the original work; and second, it allows you to integrate
the idea neatly into your own writing. Most university lecturers will tell you to use
quotation sparingly, and to use paraphrase or summary more frequently. Paraphrase is favoured over summary because it allows you to keep
the full meaning of the original text, rather than just stating the main points.

While paraphrasing is an important skill in itself, it is also a part of
writing a summary, as when you write a summary
you still need to change the writer's words. It is also recommended that you use paraphrasing when
reading and note-taking
(although many students do not, and prefer to paraphrase later, when using their notes). These are additional reasons why
learning how to paraphrase is important in your academic study.

How to paraphrase

A good paraphrase is different from the wording of the original, without altering the meaning. There
are three
vocabulary techniques you will need to use in order to achieve this, with good paraphrasing employing a
mix of all three. They are:

changing words;

changing word forms;

changing word order.

The skill of paraphrase is another reason why it is important to understand more than just the meaning of a word, but also know its
different word forms.

Below are two different examples of paraphrase, with an explanation of how each original text has been changed.

Original text 1, from Pears and Shields (2013, p.113)

Paraphrase: A restating of someone else's thoughts or ideas in your own words.

Paraphrase of text 1

Paraphrasing is a restatement of another person's ideas or thoughts using your own words.

In this example, the following changes have been made:

Paraphrase ⇒ Paraphrasing (change word form)

restating ⇒ restatement (change word form)

someone else's ⇒ another person's (change words)

thoughts or ideas ⇒ ideas or thoughts (change word order)

in ⇒ using (change word)

Original text 2, from Bailey (2000, p.21)

Paraphrasing involves changing a text so that it is quite dissimilar to the source yet retains all the meaning.

Paraphrase of text 2

Paraphrasing requires a text to be altered in a way which makes it different from the original while keeping the same meaning.

In this example, the following changes have been made:

Paraphrasing ⇒ Paraphrase (change word form)

involves ⇒ requires (change word)

changing a text ⇒ a text to be altered (change word order)

changing ⇒ altered (change word)

so that it is ⇒ in a way which makes it (change words)

dissimilar to ⇒ different from (change words)

the source ⇒ the original (change words)

yet retains all the meaning ⇒ while keeping the same meaning (change words)

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Checklist

Below is a checklist for paraphrasing. Use it to check your own paraphrasing, or get a peer (another student) to help you.